LD5655.V855 1975.V635.Pdf (4.909Mb)

LD5655.V855 1975.V635.Pdf (4.909Mb)

\JOHN MARSHALL: THE DEVELOPMENT YEARS · V ‘ _ 1755-1800/ by . Cynthia L.~Vogt/ Thesis submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the ‘ Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of ‘ MAs*rER's in History · APPROVED: George G. Shackelford, Chairman (Ä.JamesI. Robertson W€ld¤¤ A- BYGWH June, 1975 Blacksburg. Virginia ACKNOWLEDGEMENT I ii _ TABLE OF CONTENTS V TITLE PAGE ........................... i ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ........................ ii U TABLE OF CONTENTS ....................... iii CHAPTER ONE-YOUTH, EDUCATION, AND MILITARY EXPERIENCE ..... la CHAPTER TWO—LAWYER AND DELEGATE ................ 19a CHAPTER THREE-THE VIRGINIA FEDERAL CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION. 4la V CHAPTER FOUR—STATE AND FEDERAL SERVANT............. 60a CONCLUSIONS l.......................... 88a VITA............................. 98 iii ' CHAPTER ONE YOUTH, EDUCATION & ~ ° MILITARY EXPERIENCES la The individuals of the revolutionary generation who gained eminence during the first four decades of the American Republic were not born to power, nor did they achieve it easily. There were many avenues open to them, and their choices sometimes determined l not only their own career, but also the course of this new foundling nation. Their achievements and their effect in shaping the country's future sometimes exhibit remarkable consistency through varied ‘ episodes to their hour of greatness. Of few was this more true _ 1 than of John Marshall. From his youth, events and his own strong will combined to determine and develop his career in the direction of the pinnacle he ultimately achieved as Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court. John Marsha11's familial inheritance was of greatest advantage to him before he was thirty years of age; but even then his independence “ of spirit and dogged self-reliance were of equal value. Born September · 24, 1775, he was the eldest son of Thomas Marshall and Mary Randolph great-great grandson I Keith.l Through his maternal line, he was the of the famous William Randolph of "Turkey Island" and his wife, ‘ Mary Isham, and thus a cousin of such contemporaries as Thomas lwilliam Meade, Old Churches, Ministers, and Families of Virginia (Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Co., 1857.) II, 138-39, hereafter cited as Meade, Old Churches; Philip Slaughter, A History of Bristol Parish (Richmond, Virginia: J.W. Randolph and English, 1879), 212, hereafter cited as Slaughter, Bristol Parish; B.J. Ramage, "John Marshall, Southern Federa1ist," Sewanee Review, IX (1901), 130. (1) 2 Jefferson, "Light Horse Harry" Lee, Edmund Randolph, and John Randolph of Roanoke. 2 His Keith ancestors were noble Scots who, after their _ _ imigration into Virginia, took a prominent part in both civil and military affairs, in the ministry and professions, and especially in business. 3 The Welsh heritage of the Marshall's was that of honorable, though not prominent, farmers. 4 L His maternal grandfather was an Anglican clergyman. The Reverend James Keith had been well-educated in the methods of a disciplined Scottish college. 5 Like clergymen of colonial Virginia, in his _ parish of Tuckahoe just west of Richmond, he taught his own neighbors' children. Besides the three R's such a miniature school drilled into its pupils the habits of personal discipline and religious habits. .In her education, Mary Randolph Keith received as much 2S1aughter, Bristol Parish, 214; Henry Flanders, The Lives and Times of the Chief Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States (Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Co., 1858, hereafter cited as Flanders, Chief Justices), I, 4; W. Gordon McCabe, "The First University in America," Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, XXX (1922), 135; Lyon G. Tyler, "Washington and His Neighbors," College of William and Mary Quarterly, I, Ser. 1 (1892), 135f. n _ 3A1bert J. Beveridge, The Life of John Marshall, (4 vols., Boston: Houghton—Mifflin, 1916, hereafter cited as Beveridge, Marshall) I, 17; Flanders, Chief Justices, I, 1; John S. Wise, review of the The Family of Douglas or Douglass, in the College of William and Mary Qparterly, III (1896), 135; Slaughter, Bristol Parish, 216. 4Wil1iam B. Slaughter, Reminisences of Distinguished Men (Milwaukeez Godfrey and Crandall, 1878, hereafter cited as Slaughter, Reminisences), 102; B.J. Ramage, "John Marshall, Sewanee Review, IX, (1901), 130, hereafter cited as Ramage, "John Marshall", John Marshall, An_ Autobiographical Sketch, (ed. by John Stokes Adams, Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1937, hereafter cited as Marshall, Autobiography), 1. Sßeveridge, Marshall, I, 18. 3 or more education than other girls of her class in Virginia of her time. Her husband, Thomas Marshall, was not so well educated as she, but he was an avid reader and a methodical thinker.6 I He was described as a "practical surveyor, adequately acquainted with history, poetry, and general literature, of which he possessed most of the standard in the language."7 Like his wife, he was also deeply religious.8 l One cannot say that the luster of Marshall's ancestry was 4 not as important as the stalwart character traits which he inherited, because in Virginia, kinship opened doors to success which were very difficult for outsiders to breach. It does not appear, however, that John Marshall "traded upon" or placed exaggerated emphasis upon his ancestry or relationship. One of the silent concomitants J of his familial status was an impetus toward education and honor. Many who moved to the frontier, as did the Marshalls, did so because of the press of numbers in prolific families and of soil exhaustion, but some did so in order to avoid social constraints of the echelon bureaucracy. The Marshalls were among the latter. By family tradition and by their own experience they were independent and self—sufficient individualists. The isolation of the frontier added to their individualism. Although backwoodsmen in one sense, l 6Ibid.; Marshall, Autobiography, 3—4; Joseph A. Story Discourse upon the LifE:”Character, and”JÜdTEiEl”S€rvices of the Honorable John Marshall. LLLQL, (Boston: James Munroe and Co., 1835, hereafter cited as Story, Discourse), 9. Slaughter, Reminisences, 103,. aßeveridge, M;;;h;l1:—i: 18. 4 they were not uncouth primitives. Many were engendered with high V principles, religious beliefs, and a willingness to work hard. John Marshall was the son of just such a man.9 The virtues of his parents had a great impact on the youthful John Marhsall. As the eldest son, he often accompanied his father on surveying trips——working and exploring the countryside together.1O John Marshall himself ascribed most of his learning, the development of his character, as well as his love of poetry and history to his father, stating: "He was my only intelligent companion; and was both a watchful parent and an affectionate instructive friend."11 Besides setting for John a good example as a literate, religious and industrious man, the elder Marsha11's participation in public life inspired the boy. As a senior vestryman of the newly established Leeds Parish in Fauquier County, Thomas Marshall was an accepted member of the Virginia squirearchy. The strictly religious duties of a vestryman were slight, but he shared in the exercise of considerable ' power in setting and expending parish tithes for charitable social services as well as maintaining church property. He served as glpid., 30. 1OMarsha11, Autobiography, 4; Story, Discourse, 13; Beveridge, Marshall, 43; Sallie E. Marshall Hardie, "John Marshall, Third Chief Justice of the United States, As Son, Brother, Husband, and Friend," The Green Bag, VIII, (1896), 480. l1Marsha11, Autobiography, 4; Story, Discourse, 13. S Sheriff of Fauquier County as well as Clerk of Dunmore County.12 On surveying trips, Thomas Marshall appears to have discussed with his first—born son political machinations and controversies of ° the day. 13 Thomas Marshall was elected to serve as one of Fauquier County's two members of the Virginia House of Burgesses between 1761 and 1776. Thus, the Marshall name grew in prominence in the political, civil, and religious sectors.14 Another facet of Thomas Marshall's life became important to his son's development. Thomas Marshall was a friend and associate of George Washington. Both were born in Westmore1and'County where they together attended the Reverend Archibald Campbel1's_Academy, the same school John Marshall would one day attend. They teamed together as surveyors when Washington was appointed a surveyor by Lord Fairfax. They fought together in the French and Indian war.·L5 For most Americans, the idealization of George Washington did not take place until the Revolutionary War, but he had been held up as a model to John Marshall from his earliest years. At not less than second-hand, he heard about the Britsh, about the military, about the inept national government. Both Thomas Marshall lzwilliam G. Stanard, "Historical Notes and Queries," Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, III (1896), 427; Irwin S. Rhodes, The Papers of John Marshall: A Descriptive Calendar, (Norman, 0klahoma:' University of Oklahoma Press, 1969, hereafter cited as Rhodes, A Calendar), 4. l3Marshall, Autobiography, 4; Story, Discourse, 13. 1"Beveridge, Marshall, I, 52. _ l5Slaughter, Reminisences, 103; James B. Thayer, gr_g1,, John Marshall (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1967), 3-4; Rhodes, A Calendar, 3-4. 6 and George Washington served in the House of Burgesses when independence was so heatedly discussed, when Patrick Henry made his famous "Liberty or Death" speech. These topics were discussed often in the presence of young Marshall and influenced him so strongly that he enlisted in the army at the outbreak of the Revolution at the same time that his father and Washington were commissioned. Many of Marshallls later actions and decisions were influenced greatly by his deep respect for General Washington's advice and beliefs, including his choice of a political party and culminating in his decision to run for Congress in 1799. This decision brought him into contact with the leaders of the national government, which in turn, brought him to be Secretary of State and ultimately Chief Justice of the United States.

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